Maciej Witkowiak YTM/Elysium [email protected] 12.11.1999-14.08.2001 29.6.2016 [email protected]
#TABLE OF CONTENTS
ABOUT DISCLAIMER NAMING CONVENTION THE POWER THE INTERFACE (COMMON PART) CIA 8BIT INTERFACE (C64) CIA 8BIT INTERFACE (C128) CIA 16 BIT VERSION 8255 INTERFACE IRQ/NMI ABOUT PROGRAMMING IDE PINOUTS (IDE, CHIPS)
#ABOUT This file contains complete solution for building IDE interface for C64 or C128. I used here the most basic approach to interfacing IDE with C64. There are also other interfaces that connect IDE device directly to C64/128 CPU data/address bus but all of them failed for me. One was not tested. Below are links to other projects on this topic:
http://home.hccnet.nl/g.baltissen/index.htm http://home.freeuk.net/c.ward/6502/
These are links to some documents: P. Faasse's 8255 IDE interface - a good introduction to IDE interface basics and programming. My interface is based on it. You SHOULD READ this document BEFORE continuing. You MUST be familiar with it before actually building anything described here. (This file is named 8255-ide.txt and is distributed together with this document, anyway I can't remember where did I find it)
Full ATA-2 specification. Might be useful for more advanced software. (This is included too, for completeness)
Some schematics, might be useful ftp://ftp.elysium.pl/docs/schematics/
#DISCLAIMER I take no responsibility for any damage, data loss or any other disaster you might encounter while building and/or using this interface. It worked for me and should work for any other smart monkey.
#NAMING CONVENTION 74'139 means 74LS139 or 74HC139 or 74HCT139. CIA means 6526 IC, CIA#3 means the additional 6526 that you are about to add to your computer.
#THE POWER You'll have to find a power source capable of +5V and +12V. It's up to you to build or buy such a thing. C128D owners are lucky - original heavy duty power supply is just OK.
/----\
|1234| - this is IDE HDD power connector looking on HDD from back
------
1 - red +5V
2 - black GND
3 - black GND
4 - yellow +12V
All IDE drives I've ever seen have power connector on the right side and pin 1 of it is connected by red wire - this is +5V. On the left side there's data cable and the rightmost wire is also red so there's no confusion - you always connect red-to-red.
#THE INTERFACE (COMMON PART) Basically the interface consits of port IC (it may be 8255 or CIA 6526 or any other port IC) with at least 16 data lines and its wiring to C64/128 I/O space. Port's data lines are hooked directly to IDE 40pin socket.
Parts needed:
- 6526 or 8255 - port IC
- 40pin wire wrap socket
- some wires (wire wrap preferred)
- 10K, 3K3, 3K3 resistors
- 180 Ohm resistor, LED
depended on computer type and chosen interface address you will also need a 74'139 and/or 2*74'04.
#CIA 8BIT INTERFACE (C64) Description is for C64, differences with C128 are described in next part.
You need a CIA 6526 IC. Bend up pins 2-18, 23, 24, 39, 40 and solder the rest to one of two CIAs that are already on the board. Now you must interface your 3rd CIA to system bus. There is a fast way - simply connect pin 23 (/CS signal) to /IO1 or /IO2 on Expansion Port (pins 7 and 10 respectively). This way the 3rd CIA will be seen at $DExx or $DFxx memory pages. This is the easiest and the worst way. By doing this you will sooner or later encounter serious problems with cartridges. This is why I don't recommend it for anything more but testing if the CIA#3 really works.
The best way to interface CIA#3 is to build a simple address decoder. If you are willing to expand your C= it will be useful sooner or later. You don't need to build full interface, only VIC part will be enough.
Get VIC (U7) chip out of the socket and bend pin 10 up. Do the same with SID (U9) and its pin 8. Connect two wires to those bended pins. Connect also another two wires to the corresponding pins on the board - in sockets. You may try to trace the tracks and find more comfortable place to solder. If not then the solder side of the board will be the safest choice. When you'll get those 4 signals connect everything as described below:
VIC pin #10 (board) -> IC pin 15
VIC pin #10 (chip) -> IC pin 12
SID pin #8 (board) -> IC pin 1
SID pin #8 (chip) -> IC pin 4
from board - SID /CS 1 U 16 VCC (+5V)
A8 2 15 VIC /CS - from board
A9 3 14 A8
SID /CS on chip <- /D400 4 13 A9
/D500 5 12 /D000 -> VIC /CS - on chip
/D600 6 11 /D100
/D700 7 10 /D200
GND 8 9 /D300 -> CIA#3 /CS - pin 23
74'139
You will also have to connect pins 2+14 and 3+13 within 74'139. Those lines - A8 and A9 can be taken from CPU (U6) - pins 15 and 16 (respectively)
As you see you get 5 I/O page signals - for $D100, $D200, $D300, $D500, $D600 and $D700. Pages $D5, $D6 or $D7 are generally a good place for connecting second SID - you just solder one SID on another, without pins 1-4 and 8. Then you solder two capacitors to pins 1-2 and 3-4 and /CS line from our address decoder to pin 8. If you want to have a stereo SID then don't solder pins 27 together and build a copy of amplifier from the board. You might also not solder pins 23 and 24 because these are POTX and POTY and might be used to mesaure resistance.
I used /D300 for my CIA#3 because it was the safest choice for me. I recommend you doing the same.
So now, when you have two 16 bit ports usable you can wire the IDE socket to CIA#3. I used port A for control and port B for data port. Below is the list of connections.
CIA#3 IDE
(9) PA7-------------A0 (35)
(8) PA6-------------A1 (33)
(7) PA5-------------A2 (36)
(6) PA4------------/WR (23)
(5) PA3------------/RD (25)
(4) PA2-----------/CS1 (38)
(3) PA1-----------/CS0 (37)
(2) PA0 not connected, free for use
(17) PB7-------------D7 (3)
(16) PB6-------------D6 (5)
(15) PB5-------------D5 (7)
(14) PB4-------------D4 (9)
(13) PB3-------------D3 (11)
(12) PB2-------------D2 (13)
(11) PB1-------------D1 (15)
(10) PB0-------------D0 (17)
(34) /RESET------/RESET (1)
GND------------GND (2,19,22,24,26,30,40 - one or all of them)
There are two more things to do:
- connect resistors as shown below, my interface worked fine without it, but ATA-3 specs say that this is needed
DMARQ (21)--|3K3|--GND
IORDY (27)--|3K3|--GND
CSEL (28)--|10K|--+5V
- connect /ACT (39) signal from IDE socket through 180 Ohm resistor and LED to +5V This is how LEDs are wired in IBM PC compatibles. Mount LED in a visible place of your computer case and write "HDD" under it.
Congratulations! The interface is complete and ready to use.
#CIA 8BIT INTERFACE (C128) In C128 address decoding can be done easier.
Instead of using /IO1, or /IO2, or making internal decoder (which is generally A Good Thing (tm)) /CS for CIA#3 can be taken from U3 (74'138), pin 12 - this is unused and indicates I/O page $D7xx.
If you are going to build address decoder take VIC (U21) pin 13 instead of 10 for /VICCS-chip. You do not have to search on board for /VICCS signal - it is easy accessible on U11 pin 42. SID stuff remains the same (it is U5) with similar exception - /SIDCS board signal can be found at U3 pin 15.
For A8/A9 lines you will need to reach Expansion Port or ROMs because of MMU interference in this part of the bus.
#CIA 16 BIT VERSION A place to solder upper 8 bits of data is needed. The most obvious choice is to use CIA#1 or CIA#2 ports. CIA#2 port B seems to be the best - it is not used by system. CIA#2 port A is used for disk drive communication and cannot be used. CIA#1 ports A and B are utilized for keyboard scanning. I tried to use port A for upper 8 bit transfer, but I went into lots of trouble with keyboard etc. (routines worked from GEOS, but not from BASIC). More problems arrive when trying to utilize 512 byte sectors in 256 byte world of C= disk drives. Wasting a half of disk drive might sound bad, but all in all 20MB of my 40MB Conner is still a lot.
Pins D8..D15 in IDE socket have even numbers 4, 6, 8... 18 (respectively), you already know pin numbers of CIA ports A and B.
#8255 INTERFACE This part is only about interfacing 8255 with C64/128. The rest is exactly the same as in P. Faasse's article.
The project described here comes for Commodore&Amiga 12/94 magazine. I have built it on my C128 and partially failed (or succeeded, it depends :). Simply I couldn't set the ports into output mode. I don't know why. I don't even know if this will work on C64. Don't blame if you will waste whole day building it for nothing, as I did :).
You need a 8255 and two 74'04 inverters. One inverter is needed for IDE interfacing and the second is needed for interfacing 8255 to C= system bus. Address decoding is realized in the very same way as in CIA version. The select signal will be called /CS later.
Here is the list of connections: |> means that the line goes through inverter.
C64/128 bus 8255
+---------
D0\ / 34 |D0
.------------------------------|.
.------------------------------|.
D7/ \ 27 |D7
|
R/W--------+----------------36 |/WR
| |
+----1-|>-2-------5 |/RD
|
A0------3-|>-4---5-|>-6------9 |A0
A1------9-|>-8--11-|>-10-----8 |A1
|
/RESET----------13-|>-12----35 |RESET
|
/CS--------------------------6 |/CS
|
+5V---+---------------------26 |+5V
GND---|-+--------------------7 |GND
| | +----------
| +-7 (74'04 GND)
+--14 (74'04 +5V)
Control lines on the left side (except /CS which comes from the address decoder) are easily accessible in Expansion Port or directly from CPU chip. See pinouts section for more.
Port pins from 8255 should be connected as in P. Faasse's article: port A through inverter for control, port B for lower 8 bits, port C for upper 8 bits.
#IRQ/NMI IDE device (be it hard disk drive or CD-ROM) can issue interrupt request upon completing the command. I didn't even try to do it because I see very low usage of this. Chris Ward on his IDE schematic has it included but with notice that it is untested.
#ABOUT PROGRAMMING IDE See example files included in archive together with this document. Always check errors and status flags before doing anything.
#PINOUTS
IDE connector (see P. Faasse's article for full description of pins, information here should be enough to solder wires according to the list)
(This is view on front of IDE cable plug or back of IDE cable socket)
1 U 39 odd-numbered pins
....................
.........o..........
2 40 even-numbered pins
as you see pin 20 is missing - this should be the key for you. There is also another key - a notch in socket/plug which prevents even more from misconnecting. Note that on every IDE device the socket is oriented as above (notch at the top and missing pin at the bottom), regardless of its orientation to drive board.
CIA 6526
VSS 1 U 40 CNT
PA0 2 39 SP
PA1 3 38 A0
PA2 4 37 A1
PA3 5 36 A2
PA4 6 35 A3
PA5 7 34 /RESET
PA6 8 33 D0
PA7 9 32 D1
PB0 10 31 D2
PB1 11 30 D3
PB2 12 29 D4
PB3 13 28 D5
PB4 14 27 D6
PB5 15 26 D7
PB6 16 25 phi2
PB7 17 24 /FLAG
/PC 18 23 /CS
TOD 19 22 R/W
VCC 20 21 /IRQ
8255
PA3 1 U 40 PA4
PA2 2 39 PA5
PA1 3 38 PA6
PA0 4 37 PA7
/RD 5 36 /WR
/CS 6 35 RESET
GND 7 34 D0
A1 8 33 D1
A0 9 32 D2
PC7 10 31 D3
PC6 11 30 D4
PC5 12 29 D5
PC4 13 28 D6
PC0 14 27 D7
PC1 15 26 +5V
PC2 16 25 PB7
PC3 17 24 PB6
PB0 18 23 PB5
PB1 19 22 PB4
PB2 20 21 PB3
Expansion Port (looking from back of C64/128)
22....................1
ZYXWVUTSRPNMLKJHFEDCBA
1 GND A GND
2 +5V B /ROMH
3 +5V C /RESET
4 /IRQ D /NMI
5 R/W E phi2
6 dot clock F A15
7 /IO1 H A14
8 /GAME ...
9 /EXROM X A1
10 /IO2 Y A0
11 /ROML Z GND
12 BA
13 /DMA
14 D7
15 D6
...
20 D1
21 D0
22 GND